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Cornish Hedgerow Lino Print

Cornish Hedgerow Lino Print

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Shipping & delivery

This item will be posted to you by Sheridan Originals within 3 days of receiving payment.

Shipping destination Cost Additional items
United Kingdom £3.50 £0.50
EU & Northern Ireland Doesn't deliver here
United States £4.00 £0.50
Rest of the World £4.00 £0.50

Cornish meadows on windy days.

You have 14 days, from receipt, to notify the seller if you wish to cancel your order or exchange an item.

Unless faulty, the following types of items are non-refundable: items that are personalised, bespoke or made-to-order to your specific requirements; items which deteriorate quickly (e.g. food), personal items sold with a hygiene seal (cosmetics, underwear) in instances where the seal is broken; digital items.

Please note that if your order is being posted outside mainland UK, you (or the recipient) may have to pay customs or VAT charges and a handling fee. The seller is not responsible for any charges or fees that may incur.

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Full description

Hand burnished on delicate Japanese Rice printing paper The Linocut Image size A4.

Hand burnishing gives the print a unique personal quality as each print takes time (and hands) to apply enough pressure to print the image. Printed with oil based ink, signed numbered and dated on the front.

Picture shows how great it looks mounted, however it is shipped unmounted with large border so you can add your own mount and frame preference. The fourteenth edition print of a limited edition of 20 in this colour. Three colour print.

Information about Lino Printing:

Linocut is a Relief Printing process and is produced the same way as a woodcut or a wood engraving, where a flat surface of wood or lino is used as the printing surface.

The lino block consists of a thin layer of linoleum

Any parts of the design not to be printed, must first be cut away using special lino-cutting tools. (normally used for creating the marks and lines).

The part of the block that are cut away surrounds the part that will read as the image.

You then ink up the plate by rolling the ink onto the block with a small rubber paint roller, and the image is transferred to the paper using direct pressure by hand or press.

Designed by Dawn Sheridan in Studio cornwall

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